“If you knew the gift of God, and who it is that is saying to you, ‘Give me a drink,’ you would have asked him, and he would have given you living water.” John 4:10
Pentecost is one of those vivid and symbolic feasts of the Church that many of us associate with imagery of fire and the Holy Spirit. In many pictures, we will often see our Lady together with the Apostles, and tongues of fire over each of their heads. What we often forget to understand is the deeper meaning behind it all.
- Why does Jesus send and give us the Holy Spirit?
- Who or what is the Holy Spirit?
- Why is Our Lady in the scene at Pentecost, and what is her connection with the Holy Spirit?
- Why does the Holy Spirit give us gifts, and what is the meaning behind gifts from God?
- What gifts has Jesus specifically given us?
- The gift of the Sacraments
- The gift of His own mother
- The gift of the Holy Spirit
"Because the Holy Spirit is the anointing of Christ, it is Christ who, as the head of the Body, pours out the Spirit among his members to nourish, heal, and organize them in their mutual functions, to give them life, send them to bear witness, and associate them to his self-offering to the Father and to his intercession for the whole world. Through the Church's sacraments, Christ communicates his Holy and sanctifying Spirit to the members of his Body." (CCC 779)
So we can see that the Sacraments are inseparable from the Holy Spirit. Without the Holy Spirit they are just empty symbols, but with the Holy Spirit they become life giving actions that impart grace and divine life to us. This is why Jesus emphasises that the Holy Spirit is the Gift of God, that is Living Water (John 4:10). It is the Holy Spirit that gives life and power (John 6:63).
The God of our fathers raised up Jesus, whom you had killed by hanging Him on a tree. God exalted Him to His right hand as Prince and Savior, in order to grant repentance and forgiveness of sins to Israel. We are witnesses of these things, and so is the Holy Spirit, whom God has given to those who obey Him.” (Acts 5:30-32)
The Apostles now empowered by the Holy Spirit at Pentecost are transformed men. They have gone from running away and abandoning Jesus and denying Him during His Passion - to now boldly declaring themselves as witnesses to Him as the Messiah and Saviour . The difference in them is now the presence and gift of the Holy Spirit who is leading them, guiding them, strengthening them and giving life. The Living Water is now nourishing them, raising them from their weakness and giving them power to work miracles and speak the truth of the Gospel to all nations. Giving them strength to remain joyful during persecution and rejoice in tribulation and the face of death (Acts 5:42) . Only the presence Holy Spirit can do this!
But behind the scenes in all this is the subtle presence of Our Lady. She is the faithful one who stood bravely at the cross while Jesus was being crucified (John 19:25). She is the one who would have told St Luke the story of what happened to her at the Annunciation when the Angel of the Lord, Gabriel appeared to her and told her she would become pregnant. Then she would have recounted that mysterious encounter she had of the Holy Spirit overshadowing her and of her unconditional Fiat to God as she proclaimed she is the Handmaid of the Lord. She would have recognised the presence of her Spouse, the Holy Spirit at Pentecost in the wind and the fiery tongues.
Mary the mother of Jesus, the Mother of God - the Theotokos, is now also the Mother of the Church. She who gave birth to the Son of God through the power of the Holy Spirit, was also present when the power of the Holy Spirit manifested at Pentecost and was poured out into their hearts as the fiery love of God (Romans 5:5). On the cross, Jesus Himself gave us the gift of His own mother - "behold your mother" (John 19:27). He still asks us today to receive His mother as His gift to us, just as He also gives us the gift of the Holy Spirit as our Comforter and Advocate. The Holy Spirit is the one who keeps the memory and teachings of Jesus alive is us today and in the Church through the Sacraments and sanctifying grace.
Pentecost is now no longer a once off distant event. Pentecost is available to us everytime we open our hearts to the Holy Spirit and pray. The Holy Spirit has been poured into our hearts (Romans 5:5), we have been sealed with the Holy Spirit (Ephesians 1:3) as our pledge and guarantee of Jesus (2Cotinthians 1:22), the Holy Spirit is alive in with resurrection power (Romans 8:11), and also interceding for us and teaching us to pray (Romans 8:26-28). This is the gift of Jesus that never ends, it is the gift that keeps on giving.
It is only the Holy Spirit who gives us the power to follow Jesus and to be called Children of God (Romans 8:14, John 1:12). The promise and relationship with the Holy Spirit is the gift of Jesus to His Body, the Church. As our Head, He has sent us the Holy Spirit to keep us in unity, harmony and communion to mutually build eachother up and to proclaim the Gospel. The Holy Spirit is the flame that keeps the memory of Jesus alive in us and in the Church, specifically through the Sacraments. These become the living encounter of Jesus coming to us, and us receiving the grace of freedom from sin and strength to live anew each moment the promises of Christ. All of this happens under the encouragement and protection of the loving Mother of Jesus, our mother of grace and Mother of the Church. She who kept all these things in her heart (Luke 2:19, Luke 2:51), also keeps us in her Immaculate heart so we too can keep Jesus alive in our heart through the Holy Spirit.
This is why Pope St Paul VI declared Mary as Mother of the Church at the end of the Second Vatican Council. Just as 1500 years earlier at the Council of Ephesus, Mary was dogmatically declared Mother of God, Theotokos - he developed the Marian Ecclesiology of the document Lumen Gentium to now proclaim Our Lady as Mother of the Church. The Divine Maternity of Mary, in a mysterious way extends now to the Mystical Body of Christ, the Church.
This is why in 2018, Pope Francis established the Memorial of Mary, Mother of the Church to be celebrated on the first Monday after Pentecost. Mary is every present in the Church, united with us in prayer just as she was with the Apostles in the Upper Room at Pentecost. The presence of Mary and the Holy Spirit cannot be separated. So this Memorial of Mary, mother of the Church helps to show us how the Church, the Sacraments, the Holy Spirit and Our Lady are all intimately connected and unite us closer to Jesus Christ our Lord and Saviour.
May we always accept the gifts that Jesus gives us and offers to us, never rejecting them. Let us thanks Jesus always for the gifts of the Sacraments, the Holy Spirit and his own mother!
Mary, Queen and Mother of the Church - Pray for us!